Thomas Stephen Davies
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Thomas Stephens Davies FRS
FRSE Fellowship of the Royal Society of Edinburgh (FRSE) is an award granted to individuals that the Royal Society of Edinburgh, Scotland's national academy of science and letters, judged to be "eminently distinguished in their subject". This soci ...
(1795–1851) was a British mathematician.


Life

He was born on 1 January 1795. Davies made his earliest communications to the '' Leeds Correspondent'' in July 1817 and the '' Gentleman's Diary'' for 1819. He subsequently contributed largely to the ''Gentleman's and Lady's Diary'', Clay's ''Scientific Receptacle'', the ''Monthly Magazine'', the '' Philosophical Magazine'', the ''Bath and Bristol Magazine'', and the ''Mechanics' Magazine''. Davies was elected a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of London, 19 March 1840 Davies's early acquaintance with Dr. William Trail, the author of the ''Life of Dr. Robert Simson'', materially influenced his course of study and made him familiar with the old as well as with the modern professors of geometry. He became a fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh in 1831, and he contributed several original and elaborate papers to its ''Transactions''. He also published ''Researches on Terrestrial Magnetism'' in the ''Philosophical Transactions'', ''Determination of the Law of Resistance to a Projectile'' in the ''Mechanics' Magazine'', and other papers in the ''Cambridge and Dublin Mathematical Journal'', the ''Civil Engineer'', the ''Athenæum'', the ''Westminster Review'', and ''Notes and Queries''. In 1831 he was elected a Fellow of the
Royal Society of Edinburgh The Royal Society of Edinburgh is Scotland's national academy of science and letters. It is a registered charity that operates on a wholly independent and non-partisan basis and provides public benefit throughout Scotland. It was established i ...
his proposer being
John Shoolbred John Shoolbred FRSE (13 March 1766 – 12 October 1831) was a Scottish naval surgeon. He is associated with the early widespread use of smallpox vaccine in India in the early 19th century. Life He was born in Auchtermuchty in Fife on 13 March 17 ...
. In April, 1833 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society. In 1834, he was appointed one of the mathematical masters in the Royal Military Academy at Woolwich. Among the numerous subjects that engaged his attention were researches on the properties of the trapezium,
Pascal Pascal, Pascal's or PASCAL may refer to: People and fictional characters * Pascal (given name), including a list of people with the name * Pascal (surname), including a list of people and fictional characters with the name ** Blaise Pascal, Fren ...
's
hexagram , can be seen as a compound composed of an upwards (blue here) and downwards (pink) facing equilateral triangle, with their intersection as a regular hexagon (in green). A hexagram ( Greek language, Greek) or sexagram (Latin) is a six-pointed ...
me mystique, Brianchon's theorem, symmetrical properties of plane triangles, and researches into the geometry of three dimensions. His new system of
spherical geometry 300px, A sphere with a spherical triangle on it. Spherical geometry is the geometry of the two-dimensional surface of a sphere. In this context the word "sphere" refers only to the 2-dimensional surface and other terms like "ball" or "solid sp ...
preserves his name in the list of well-known mathematicians. His presentation "On the Velocipede" in May 1837 is extant as a manuscript and gives a vivid testimony of the rise and putting down of the draisines aka hobby-horses. He must have been an early hobby-horse rider himself according to that (transcript in ''The Boneshaker'' #108(1985) pp. 4–9 and #111(1986) pp. 7–12)) His death, after six years of illness, took place at Broomhall Cottage, Shooter's Hill, Kent, on 6 January 1851, when he was in his fifty-seventh year.


Publications

Davies edited the following works: * ''A Course of Mathematics for the use of the Royal Military Academy, by Charles Hutton. The eleventh edition by Olinthus Gregory'', 1837, 2 vols.; the principal alterations, additions, and improvements in this work were made by Davies. * ''Solutions of the Principal Questions in Dr. Hutton's “Course of Mathematics,”'' 1840. * ''A Course of Mathematics, by C. Hutton, continued by O. Gregory; twelfth edition by T. S. Davies,'' 1841–1843, 2 vols. * ''The Mathematician'', ed. by T. S. Davies and others, 1845, 1847, and 1850. Of the above, ''Solutions of the Principal Questions'' is the most important work. It is a large octavo of 560 pages, enriched with four thousand solutions on nearly all subjects of mathematical interest and of various degrees of difficulty. A long catalogue of Davies's writings is printed in the ''Westminster Review'', April 1851, pp. 70–83.


References

* ;Attribution {{DEFAULTSORT:Davies, Thomas Stephens 1790s births 1851 deaths 19th-century British mathematicians Fellows of the Royal Society of Edinburgh Fellows of the Royal Society Fellows of the Society of Antiquaries of London Place of birth missing